Bill Cunningham New York
Documentaries
USA, 2010, 88 min
Sun, May 2 / 12:30 / Kabuki / BILLC02K
Thu, May 6 / 8:15 / Kabuki / BILLC06K
"We all get dressed for Bill," says Anna Wintour about Bill Cunningham, the 80-year-old photographer and unlikely man-about-town. Bill Cunningham has two weekly columns in the Style section of the New York Times: On The Street, in which he identifies fashion trends as he spots them emerging on the street; and Evening Hours, his ongoing coverage of the social whirl of charities that benefit the cultural life of the city. The result is far from simple picture taking—it is cultural anthropology. Still, no one knows a thing about Bill Cunningham, the man himself. Intensely private and averse to any kind of attention, it took filmmaker Richard Press and producer Philip Gefter seven years to convince Cunningham to be filmed. Using only small prosumer HD cameras and no crew, Bill Cunningham New York has the intimacy and immediacy of a home movie. It chronicles a man who is obsessively interested in only one thing: the pictures he takes that document the way people dress. Bill has lived in the same small studio above Carnegie Hall for 50 years, never eats in restaurants and gets around on a worn-out bicycle—his sole means of transportation. The contradiction of his monk-like existence and the extravagance of his photographic subject matter is one aspect of his private life revealed in the movie. A sartorial Weegee, habitually dressed in a blue work jacket, Bill Cunningham has tried to live his life as an unencumbered man. He wants only his independence to be able to point his camera when beauty crosses his path. With this singular goal, he has managed to create a poignant and ongoing chronicle of the intersection of fashion and society in New York over 50 years—in effect, a portrait of New York City itself.